APRIL 15, 1913 



Honey reports continued from page 2. 



Indianapolis. — Fancy white comb is selling at 

 18 cents per pound; No. 1 white, one cent less. 

 Amber is in slow demand, and at lower prices. Sup- 

 ply of fancy white seems to be limited, and none is 

 offered by producers. Best extracted sells at 11 to 

 12 in five-gallon cans. Beeswax is in good demand, 

 and producers are being paid 30 cents per pound. 



Indianapolis, April 9. Walter S. Poudee. 



Denver. — We quote comb honey in a jobbing way 

 at the following figures: No. 1, $3.05; choice, $2.90; 

 No. 2, $2.70, per case of 24 sections. Extracted 

 honev, white, 9; light amber, 8; strained, 6% to 7. 

 We pay 28 cts. in cash, and 30 in trade for clean 

 yellow "beeswax delivered here. 

 The Colorado Honey-Producers' Association. 



Denver, April 8. Frank Rauchfuss, Mgr. 



Zanesville. — Flood conditions in Ohio and bor- 

 dering States have paralyzed business in general, 

 the honey business included; consequently quota- 

 tions are of little meaning or value. Producers still 

 have a little of the old crop to offer. While comb is 

 pretty well cleaned up, there seems to be an over- 

 supply of extracted. Nominally, best grades of white 

 comb should bring 18 to 19 ; white extracted, 10 to 

 11. For beeswax, producers are offered 30 cts. in 

 cash, 32 in trade. 



Zanesville, April 4. Edmund W. Peirce. 



Buffalo. — Demand for both extracted and comb 

 honey is very slow in this market ; very little in the 

 hands of jobbers. I think the price is too high to 

 make a free movement. I think the price is too high 

 all be sold before the new crop is ready for market. 

 W« quote fancy white comb honey, 17 to 18; choice 

 ditto, 16 to 17; No. 1 ditto, 15 to 16; No. 2 ditto, 

 13 to 14 ; dark ditto, 12 to 15 ; No. 1 white extract- 

 ed, 9 to 10; amber ditto, 6 to 7 ; dark ditto, 8 to 9 ; 

 beeswax, 27 to 28. 



Buffalo, April 5. W. C. TOWNSEND. 



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